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Sunday, April 05, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "treatment" (7 articles)

(FILES) Real Madrid's French forward #10 Kylian Mbappe reacts after missing a goal opportunity during the UEFA Champions League knockout round play-off first leg football match between SL Benfica and Real Madrid CF at Estadio da Luz in Lisbon on February 17, 2026. Kylian Mbappe, who has been suffering from a left knee injury since December 2025, is currently in Paris with Real Madrid's medical staff to "assess the progress" of his injury, but no "surgery" is planned "at this stage", AFP learned on March 2, 2026, from the French striker's entourage. (AFP)
Sport

Real Madrid superstar Mbappe in Paris for treatment on knee injury

France captain Kylian Mbappe was in Paris Monday for treatment on a knee injury but no surgery is planned, the Real Madrid superstar's entourage said.Mbappe was "in Paris accompanied by members of the Real Madrid medical staff," the striker's camp said in a statement. "In agreement with the club, he is undergoing further tests on his knee," it continued, "with the aim of optimising his follow-up care and preparing for his comeback. No surgical intervention is being planned at the moment."Mbappe has been struggling with an injury to the external ligament of his left knee since the end of 2025 and missed last week's Champions League play-off second leg against Benfica due to "persistent pain" in training, sources close to the player said.His entourage insisted there was no disagreement regarding the treatment required by the player between his club and the French national team, who will be desperate to have Mbappe fully fit for the upcoming World Cup."It was a bit of a consensus between everyone (Mbappe, the coach and the doctors), and we think the best thing is that he stops, that he recovers and comes back at 100 percent," Real Madrid coach Alvaro Arbeloa said late last week. "It's not going to be a question of days, it will be a bit longer, but I can't say how long, hopefully not too long."It remains to be seen if Mbappe, who has scored 38 goals in 33 appearances for his club this season, will be able to play in the Champions League last-16 tie against Manchester City, the first leg of which is scheduled for March 11 with the return on March 17.France have two friendly matches lined up in the United States at the end of the month, against Brazil in Boston on March 26 and Colombia in Washington three days later. Their first World Cup game is on June 16 against Senegal. 

(FILES) In this file photo taken on September 24, 2019, Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan speaks during a press conference at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, - Khan was dismissed on April 10, 2022 as Pakistan's prime minister after losing a no-confidence vote in parliament following weeks of political turmoil. (AFP)
International

Former cricket captains appeal to Pakistan govt over Khan care

More than a dozen former international cricket captains, including India's Sunil Gavaskar and Kapil Dev, rallied Tuesday for jailed Pakistan ex-premier Imran Khan, appealing the Islamabad government to give him "adequate" medical treatment.Despite India's fraught relations with Pakistan, including military conflict last year, former India captains Gavaskar and Kapil signed a petition expressing "deep concern" about Khan's treatment and prison conditions.The statement, signed by 14 captains and seen by AFP, demands the proper care of Khan, a former World Cup-winning captain who according to his lawyer has lost most of the vision in his right eye.Khan has been in jail since 2023 and was sentenced late last year along with his wife to 17 years on corruption charges they both deny.His lawyer visited Khan in jail last week and later submitted a report to Pakistan's chief justice and the Supreme Court detailing his concerns and requesting treatment for his client.The statement signed by the former cricket skippers "respectfully" urges Pakistan "to ensure that Imran Khan receives immediate, adequate and ongoing medical attention from qualified specialists of his choosing".The campaign is led by former Australian captain and contemporary of Khan, Greg Chappell."Khan deserves fair and transparent access to legal processes without undue delay or hindrance," the statement said.Other signatories are Michael Atherton, Michael Brearley, Nasser Hussain and David Gower (England), Allan Border, Ian Chappell, Belinda Clark, Steve Waugh and Kim Hughes (Australia), Clive Lloyd (West Indies) and John Wright (New Zealand).Pakistan's Supreme Court has already requested a report on Khan's living conditions in the Adiala jail near Rawalpindi, in connection with a case that has been pending since 2023.Authorities had previously confirmed that Khan underwent a 20-minute medical procedure in January at Islamabad's government hospital but gave no other details."Recent reports concerning his health – particularly the alarming deterioration of his vision while in custody – and the conditions of his imprisonment over the past two and a half years have caused us profound concern," the captains said, calling for "decency and justice".Khan was prime minister from 2018 to 2022 before being removed in a no-confidence vote during a political crisis over tensions between his government and Pakistan's powerful military establishment.He has since faced multiple legal cases on corruption and other charges.Khan and his party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), maintain that the cases against him are politically motivated.His arrest triggered nationwide protests in May 2023, some of which turned violent and led to hundreds of arrests.The office of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif told AFP that it had not yet received the captains' statement.Khan played 88 tests and 175 one-day internationals for Pakistan between 1971-1992 and captained them to their only ODI World Cup victory in 1992.His son Kasim Khan told Reuters that the immediate concern was his father's health but there were other pressing issues including "his freedom, abiding by correct human rights processes and also the rule of law and just ensuring that he's allowed a proper, fair trial". 

Gulf Times
Qatar

Ashghal signs pact with AKCC to recycle sludge from treatment plants

The Public Works Authority 'Ashghal' signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) for a strategic partnership with Al Khalij Cement Company (AKCC), aimed at recycling 100% of the sludge generated by Ashghal's wastewater treatment plants across Qatar.The signing ceremony was witnessed by His Excellency Minister of Municipality Abdullah bin Hamad bin Abdullah al-Attiyah; Chairman of the Board of Qatari Investors Group, Abdullah bin Nasser al-Misnad; and President of the Public Works Authority 'Ashghal', Eng Mohammed bin Abdulaziz al-Meer along with a select group of representatives from various concerned entities.This initiative represents a significant step towards implementing the principles of the circular economy in Qatar, where massive quantities of sludge, ranging between 744,000 and 1.29mn tons, will be converted into clean energy over a period of five years. Previously considered waste, the sludge will now become a value-added resource through sustainable treatment and full recycling. The agreement also contributes to solving sludge disposal challenges by avoiding its transportation and/or landfilling, thus reducing carbon emissions.On the importance of the agreement, His Excellency Eng. Mohammed bin Abdulaziz al-Meer stated: "This partnership with Al Khalij Cement Company reflects Ashghal's commitment to achieving environmental sustainability and the circular economy, through the integrated recycling of wastewater, by using treated water for irrigation and cooling and utilising solid byproducts as fuel catalysts and inputs in cement products."On his part, Abdullah bin Nasser al-Misnad said: "This partnership embodies our ambitious vision to drive sustainable growth, as we focus on integrating alternative fuels and renewable materials into our operations to reduce emissions, particularly carbon emissions, while simultaneously protecting natural resources. Through enhancing our competitiveness, we aim to achieve full alignment with Qatar National Vision 2030."This agreement comes as part of Ashghal's efforts to develop sustainable waste management solutions, where the authority recycles 98% of treated wastewater and uses it in agriculture, afforestation and strategic storage, in support of environmental sustainability in Qatar. 

Novo Nordisk Qatar, under Ebn Sina Medical Company hosted the second edition of ACT Summit (Advancing Cardio-Metabolic Treatment) in Doha on October 17 and 18.
Business

Novo Nordisk and Ebn Sina Medical host second ACT Summit in Qatar

Following the “remarkable” success of the inaugural ACT Summit held in Dubai in May, Novo Nordisk Qatar, under Ebn Sina Medical Company hosted the second edition of ACT Summit (Advancing Cardio-Metabolic Treatment) in Doha on October 17 and 18.Ebn Sina is a subsidiary of Aamal Company.The two-day scientific summit gathered over 350 healthcare professionals specialised in obesity and diabetes management from more than 12 countries, including Qatar, other GCC countries, Pakistan, Iraq, and Kazakhstan.The event focused on addressing the pressing issues surrounding cardiovascular kidney metabolic complications of Type 2 diabetes and obesity, emphasising the importance of a multidisciplinary approach to enhance patient outcomes and improve long-term weight loss; glycaemic control and the complications of obesity and diabetes; and exploring the role that the semaglutide therapies may play in combating these diseases.Renowned healthcare Professionals from Qatar and worldwide including Germany; USA; Canada and Italy shared cutting-edge insights into emerging treatment strategies and the importance of continuity of care in obesity starting from adolescence to adulthood, clinical innovations, and new models of integrated care.Manvendra Singh, General Manager, Novo Nordisk Qatar, stated:“ACT Summit reinforces Novo Nordisk’s commitment to advancing cardio-metabolic education and empowering healthcare professionals with the latest scientific insights. Hosting this event in Doha reflects Qatar’s growing role as a regional hub for medical excellence and collaboration.“As Qatar and the region continue to face high rates of obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease, ACT Summit is vital. Together, we are committed to strengthening the healthcare landscape and improving patient outcomes through innovative, science-driven solutions.Rashid al-Mansoori, CEO, Aamal Company added: “I am pleased to take part in this important summit and address a distinguished audience from the medical sector. We are proud that Aamal’s subsidiary Ebn Sina Medical, continues to partner with leading global innovators like Novo Nordisk.“The ACT Summit 2 demon-strates our shared dedication to elevating medical education and supporting Qatar’s vision of improving public health outcomes.”Throughout the two-day event, participants engaged in plenary discussions, case-based learning, and interactive workshops exploring the interconnection between obesity, diabetes, and cardio-renal complications.The summit concluded with a shared call to action — to advance integrated care and accelerate collaborative solutions to reduce the regional burden of cardio-metabolic diseases.

Gulf Times
International

3 Killed, 16 injured in minibus collision in southern Turkey

Three people were killed, and 16 others were injured when a minibus carrying farmworkers collided with a truck in Mersin Province, southern Turkey. According to Anadolu Agency, the minibus rammed into the rear of a trailer on the Ankara-Tarsus highway, killing three passengers. Medical teams transported 16 injured people to hospital for treatment. In May, 12 people were injured in a similar crash involving a workers' bus and a car in Kahramanmaras Province, also in southern Turkey.

Smoke rises in the city after a Russian drone and missile strikes, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine September 28, 2025. REUTERS
International

6 Injured in Russian drone attack on Kyiv

Six people were injured in a Russian drone attack on the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, the Ukrainian news agency (Ukrainform) reported Sunday. Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said the overnight attack left five people hospitalized, while one woman received treatment at the scene. More than three years since the war broke out, the Russia-Ukraine conflict continues with no signs of de-escalation.

Gulf Times
Business

Why end of ‘de minimis’ tariff exemption risks higher prices, shipping delays

A Latin term that used to be little-known outside the world of customs brokers has become the stuff of headlines this year. That’s thanks to a decision by US President Donald Trump to end the tariff-free treatment of “de minimis” merchandise that had been in place for almost 90 years.The phrase — which loosely translates as “too small to matter” — refers to small packages shipped directly to consumers from abroad, millions of which arrive in the US every day. Qualifying as de minimis came with a huge perk: no customs declarations and no duties.This worked to the advantage of Chinese dis-count marketplaces such as Shein Group Ltd and Temu, which have tapped Americans’ appetite for buying cheap clothing, toys, electronics, and more, online. But the tariff exemption came to an end for packages from mainland China and Hong Kong on May 2, and ceased for the rest of the world on August 29.US consumers now face the prospect of higher prices and a longer wait for their orders. Ahead of the de minimis changes taking effect in August, many postal operators paused US-bound parcel shipments, citing a lack of clarity over how the tariffs will be collected.What was the US de minimis exemption?For a package to qualify, it had to have a re-tail value of no more than $800, which was high compared with other countries. The threshold in Canada is C$150 ($109) for parcels from the US and Mexico to be exempt from customs duties and C$20 ($15) for those from elsewhere, while in the European Union it’s €150 ($175). China, for its part, generally waives duties on packages worth up to about $7.The exemption in the US dated back to 1938, when Congress tweaked tariff rules to drop duties on low-cost items to avoid unnecessary expense for little reward, or, as one former Treasury official put it, “spending a dollar to collect 50 cents.” The exemption started at $1, where it stayed for decades before rising to $5 in 1990, $200 in 1993 and then jumping to $800 in 2016 during the Barack Obama presidency.What do the new rules mean for US consumers?The end of the de minimis exemption doesn’t mean Americans can’t order small packages from abroad. What’s changed is that the goods will be channelled through customs and incur levies.Sellers could absorb the additional costs or they could pass them on to consumers — either indirectly through a higher retail price, or directly by making buyers pay the duty.Shein and Temu raised prices on a wide range of products — from dresses to kitchenware — ahead of the tariffs kicking in on May 2. The average price of 98 products listed on Shein tracked by Bloomberg News increased by more than 20% by early May from two weeks prior.Elsewhere, South Korean beauty retailer Olive Young — which has been capitalising on the social media-fuelled popularity of Korean skincare products among American consumers — said it would add a 15% duty to all US orders at the checkout from August 27.The end of the de minimis carve-out could dis-proportionately impact lower-income households in America. Almost 75% of direct shipments imported by the poorest zip codes were de minimis, compared to 52% for the richest zip codes, according to analysis from the National Bureau of Economic Research using data from 2021.Could the end of the de minimis exemption cause supply chain disruption?Mail carriers in more than two dozen countries, including Australia, Singapore and Norway, temporarily suspended shipments to the US ahead of the August 29 de minimis cutoff date, as they grappled with how the new system will be implemented.The restrictions imposed by Deutsche Post and DHL Parcel Germany — part of DHL Group, one of the world’s largest couriers — reflected uncertainty over “how and by whom customs duties will be collected in the future, what addition-al data will be required, and how the data transmission to the US Customs and Border Protection will be carried out,” according to a company statement.Postal services have never had to handle this amount of paperwork before. The packages that enter the US now have to have a customs declaration that details the contents of the parcel, the value, and the country of origin of the goods — not just where they’re shipped from, but where they were made.Beyond the near-term disruption from potential backlogs, many e-commerce deliveries are likely to become slower because the added costs will make air cargo — already an expensive way to move freight — a potentially unprofitable mode of transportation for low-cost goods.Rather than fly on a plane and take a couple of days to arrive, a package might instead take a three-week journey on a container ship from China to the US West Coast.Which companies will be most affected by the de minimis carve-out disappearing?Low-cost online retailers such as Temu, Shein and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd’s AliExpress used the de minimis exemption for years to expand in the US — a trend that was supercharged by the Covid-era boom in e-commerce.Cross-border online retail has been a lifesaver for many Chinese manufacturers running on wafer-thin profit margins as spending by domestic shoppers plunged during the pandemic and never really recovered.Shein pioneered the model of targeting cost-conscious Americans with $2 blouses and $10 shirts during the pandemic, and Temu jumped in around 2022 with its “Shop Like a Billionaire” catchphrase. TikTok Shop, the shopping platform of the popular video app, is a more recent entrant.The end of the de minimis exemption appears to have had a dampening effect on US demand. Shein’s weekly sales dropped by as much as 23% year-on-year in late June before staging a recovery, according to Bloomberg Second Measure, which analyses credit and debit card transactions in the US. Temu saw a deeper decline — its weekly sales slumped by more than a third year-on-year in June and had yet to rebound to the prior year’s levels by mid-August.It’s not just the bottom line of the Chinese marketplaces that will be impacted by the de minimis changes. The exposure to tariffs will also hit “dropshippers,” who use e-commerce platforms to fulfil orders and send goods directly to customers, as well as small US businesses that have been importing products in batches under the $800 threshold to avoid tariffs. Small international businesses selling into the US will be affected too, including those using marketplaces such as eBay Inc and Etsy Inc.There are fears that the end of the de minimis exemption in the US could spur a flood of cheap goods, particularly those from China, to be sent to other countries instead. Amid concerns about domestic producers being undercut, markets including the UK are reviewing their own duty-free treatment of low-value imports.How have Trump’s de minimis changes evolved?Within days of taking office, the Trump administration suspended the de minimis rule for mainland China and Hong Kong. However, it soon delayed the change while the US Postal Service wrestled with how to implement the policy.The suspension was effectively reimposed on May 2, hitting buyers of packages worth up to $800 arriving from mainland China and Hong Kong with either a levy equivalent to 120% of their value or a flat fee of $100.When the US and China later announced an agreement to lower triple-digit tariffs on each other’s imports, Trump signed an executive order cutting the de minimis duty to 54%, while maintaining the flat fee.Then, on July 30, Trump said the de minimis ex-emption would end for items sent from anywhere in the world, although gifts valued at less than $100 will remain duty-free. According to a White House fact sheet, starting August 29, a posted package will be taxed in one of two ways:* The importer can pay a percentage levy on the parcel’s value. This is equivalent to the pre-vailing tariff rate the US has assigned to goods from the country of origin as part of Trump’s broader trade war.* Or, for the first six months of the new policy, the importer can pay a flat duty ranging from $80 to $200 per item, depending on the applicable country-specific tariff rate.What effect has the US de minimis exemption had?With the threshold as high as it was in the US, around 4mn small packages claiming de minimis exemptions crossed into the US every day in 2024, according to US Customs and Border Protection. These parcels often went unchecked be-fore being transferred to a truck for delivery directly to the consumer’s doorstep.This helped Americans access lots of cheap merchandise sold by e-commerce retailers in China. It also strained global supply chains, raised air cargo costs and swamped border enforcement efforts.The packages are thought to be one of the ways illegal drugs such as fentanyl have been smug-gled into the US and how other goods have entered the country in violation of rules against imports from regions known for human-rights abuses.The administration of President Joe Biden was well on its way to cracking down on de minimis abuses before he lost his re-election bid in November 2024, so Trump’s decision to eliminate the exemption wasn’t a complete surprise.How much trade did the de minimis rule affect?The de minimis exemption affected quite a bit of trade in both volume and value, with both rising exponentially. Such packages used to be confined to t-shirts and small electronics, but they’ve expanded to include bigger-ticket items such as electric bikes retailing for $799.According to a White House fact sheet, the number of individual shipments to the US claiming de minimis exemptions surged to nearly 1.4bn in 2024, up from 134mn a decade earlier. While China officially reported about $23bn worth of small parcel exports to the US last year, Nomura Holdings Inc estimates as much as $46bn of US-bound packages came from the country. (There’s a discrepancy because with so many parcels, it’s hard to count all of them in official statistics.) That’s still just a small fraction of the value of total US goods imports, which last year surpassed $3.2tn. Consequently, the suspension of the de minimis ex-emption isn’t expected to have a major effect on the US economy.